Test Information Guide
Field 74: Earth and Space Science
Sample Open-Response Item
The following materials contain:
- Sample test directions for the open-response item
- A sample open-response item
- An example of a strong response to the open-response item
- The scoring rubric
Sample Test Directions for Open-Response Items
This section of the test consists of two open-response item assignments. You will be asked to prepare a written response of approximately 150–300 words, or 1–2 pages, for each assignment.
Read the assignments carefully before you begin your responses. Think about how you will organize your responses. You may use the erasable sheet(s) to make notes, write an outline, or otherwise prepare your responses. However, your final response to each assignment must be either:
- typed into the on-screen response box,
- written on a response sheet and scanned using the scanner provided at your workstation, or
- provided using both the on-screen response box (for typed text) and a response sheet (for calculations or drawings) that you will scan using the scanner provided at your workstation.
Instructions for scanning your response sheet(s) are available by clicking the "Scanning Help" button at the top of the screen.
As a whole, your response to each assignment must demonstrate an understanding of the knowledge of the field. In your response to each assignment, you are expected to demonstrate the depth of your understanding of the subject area by applying your knowledge rather than by merely reciting factual information.
Your response to each assignment will be evaluated based on the following criteria.
- PURPOSE: the extent to which the response achieves the purpose of the assignment
- SUBJECT KNOWLEDGE: appropriateness and accuracy in the application of subject knowledge
- SUPPORT: quality and relevance of supporting evidence
- RATIONALE: soundness of argument and degree of understanding of the subject area
The open-response item assignments are intended to assess subject knowledge. Your responses must be communicated clearly enough to permit valid judgment of the evaluation criteria by scorers. Your responses should be written for an audience of educators in this field. The final version of each response should conform to the conventions of edited American English. Your responses should be your original work, written in your own words, and not copied or paraphrased from some other work.
Be sure to write about the assigned topics. Remember to review your work and make any changes you think will improve your responses.
Any time spent responding to an assignment, including scanning the response sheet(s), is part of your testing time. Monitor your time carefully. When your testing time expires, a pop-up message will appear on-screen indicating the conclusion of your test session. Only response sheets that are scanned before you end your test or before time has expired will be scored. Any response sheet that is not scanned before testing ends will NOT be scored.
Sample Open-Response Item
Objective 0012
Prepare an organized, developed analysis of a key topic in Earth science related to Earth's Place in the Universe or Earth's Systems: Geosphere.
Use the information below to complete the assignment that follows.
Phenomenon
Changes in Earth's climate result from variations in energy flow into and out of Earth's systems.
Student Standard
HS-ESS2-411: Use a model to describe how variations in the flow of energy into and out of Earth's systems over different time scales result in changes in climate. Analyze and interpret data to explain that long-term changes in Earth's tilt and orbit result in cycles of climate change such as Ice Ages.
Use your knowledge of Earth science and the changes that have occurred on Earth since its origin to write a response of approximately 150–300 words, or 1–2 pages, in which you:
- describe the key scientific concepts related to changes in Earth's tilt and orbit over geologic time and their effects on Earth's systems to the depth of knowledge a student would need to master standard HS-ESS2-4;
- include a representative graph, formula, and/or diagram with all the proper labels to depict the variations in Earth's tilt and orbit that produced periods of global glaciations; and
- discuss how an Earth and space science teacher could use the specific science and engineering practice of "analyzing and interpreting data" to help students understand phenomena related to changes in climate that correspond to events that occurred over periods of time ranging from thousands to millions of years.
Sample Strong Response to the Open-Response Item
The sample response below reflects a strong knowledge and understanding of the subject matter.
Key concepts: The idea that variations in the Earth's axial tilt and orbit are drivers of climate fluctuations was first proposed based upon observations of three phenomena: the shape of the orbit, known as eccentricity, the angle of the axis with respect to the horizontal (orbital) plane, known as obliquity, and the direction the axis is pointed, known as precession. (See diagram.)
Working in concert, these phenomena can effect the position of the earth in space with respect to the sun and its warmth. They can put the earth at a great enough distance away from the sun to lower the average global temperature slightly. It has been determined that a modest lowering of the global average can have significant effects, particularly on land surfaces in the Earth's higher latitudes. The result can be that the accumulation of snow grows to the point that more is retained from one winter than melts over the course of the following summer. This is how glaciers form and are maintained.
It was theorized that the advance and retreat of continental ice sheets, in the periods called "ice ages," coincided with these fluctuations in tilt and orbit. Predictions of the periods for formation were made and those predictions have since been confirmed by accumulating geologic evidence.
As an exercise in guiding student analysis and interpretation of data one might look at simplified versions of these predictions and compare those with the data gathered by various methods, such as ocean floor sediment cores, that have served as scientific confirmations of the theory.
There are three diagrams shown. There is a diagram that shows that Earth’s orbit around the sun is elliptical, not circular. This diagram is labeled “eccentricity”. The Earth is shown at its closest point to the sun at the perihelion and furthest from the sun at the aphelion. Another diagram is labeled “obliquity”. There are three lines going straight through the Earth, showing alternation between 21.8 and 24.4 degrees off of zero. The last diagram is labeled “precession” and defined as “the wobble of the axis, like a spinning top gets a wobble as it begins to slow down”. Two arrows coming off the Earth indicate a periodic shift in the orientation of Earth’s axis from pointing at Vega to the North Star.
Scoring Rubric
Performance Characteristics
The following characteristics guide the scoring of responses to the open-response item(s).
Purpose | The extent to which the response achieves the purpose of the assignment. |
---|---|
Subject Matter Knowledge | Accuracy and appropriateness in the application of subject matter knowledge. |
Support | Quality and relevance of supporting details. |
Rationale | Soundness of argument and degree of understanding of the subject matter. |
Scoring Scale
The scoring scale below, which is related to the performance characteristics for the tests, is used by scorers in assigning scores to responses to the open-response item(s).
Score Point | Score Point Description |
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4 |
The "4" response reflects a thorough knowledge and understanding of the subject matter.
|
3 | The "3" response reflects an adequate knowledge and understanding of the subject matter.
|
2 | The "2" response reflects a limited knowledge and understanding of the subject matter.
|
1 | The "1" response reflects a weak knowledge and understanding of the subject matter.
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U | The response is unrelated to the assigned topic, illegible, primarily in a language other than English, not of sufficient length to score, or merely a repetition of the assignment. |
B | There is no response to the assignment. |
Acknowledgments
12016 Massachusetts Science and Technology/Engineering Curriculum Framework. Massachusetts Department of Elementary and Secondary Education.